Wednesday Afternoon Commute - altruistic punishment

The WeMoveDC Idea Exchange was last Saturday. There is some coverage from the BAC, WABA and GGW.

The Navy Yard section of the Anacostia Riverwalk Trail is open again. Biking is still not allowed.

Mayor Gray won't rule out a congestion tax. "It's a possibility. I wouldn't rule it out," Gray says. "I haven't considered it yet. I know they do that in London where you can't go into certain areas of the city with a car without paying. But I don't think we're at that point yet." Such a move could really make bicycling a more appealing option to a lot of people.

I failed to mention this from the helmet article yesterday " This session, another bill would open up sidewalks to cyclists to give the road-shy a place to pedal, said Del. Aruna Miller, a Montgomery Democrat. But cyclists oppose that measure, too, in the name of promoting driver awareness of cyclists." Whoa. Did not know about that. Which cyclists oppose making sidewalk cycling legal? Is that a WABA or BikeMaryland position?

"Completion of the last missing piece of a trail network connecting Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C., will be celebrated at a June 15 event in West Homestead and at the Point in Downtown Pittsburgh." So I definitely think this should also be celebrated here in DC. Perhaps in Georgetown. I don't know who should organize it (WABA or the C&O Canal group or DDOT or who?) But they didn't just celebrate the Chunnel opening in England.

Why driver's hate cyclists (one theory): they're perceived as rule-breaking free riders "Then along come cyclists, innocently following what they see are the rules of the road, but doing things that drivers aren't allowed to: overtaking queues of cars, moving at well below the speed limit or undertaking on the inside."

Nevermind, even I'm not sure if I meant what I just said - you decide:

Allowing bicycles on the sidewalk can be an inadequate substitute for building more effective bicycle facilities. It's a shortcut that could allow municipal transportation interests to claim a huge increase in "bikeable miles" without actually doing anything.

And assuming most people see the world the way I do, the continuum goes [Separated Exclusive Bikeways] > [Separated multi-use ways] > [on-road protected cycletracks] > [...] > [sidewalks] > [bike prohibition].

So, if anyone goes for allowing bicycles on sidewalks before they've adequately demonstrated that they will build out (engineer, educate, enforce, and so on) things like sharrows, BMUFL signage, bike-positive traffic regulation, etcetera, the otherwise reasonable step of ending prohibition of bicycles on sidewalks feels an awful lot like appeasement intended to stop bikes from becoming everyone's primary mode.

Allowing sidewalk cycling should depend on local conditions, and as such should be in the control of local govts. They should be able to ban it or allow it as they see fit. While in general sidewalk biking is not good, there are places where the road conditions are not suitable/attractive for most cylcists, and where there are not yet suitable bike lanes/bike paths. And often these are places where pedestrian traffic light (yes there are other dangers, but generally not so much as to warrant requiring cyclists to refrain from sidewalk cycling)

^^^+1
One of the two routes I had for my old commute was Mass Ave above the Western Ave circle. Going down the hill was no prob,coming up I used the sidewalk. There were just too many people not going anywhere near the speed limit,the hill was too steep to have any real speed,and the curb was too tall to hop if I had to bail.

The problem with local control of sidewalk cycling is how on earth is a cyclist to know what the local ordinance is? Cycling advocates have long fought against patchwork laws that essentially assume that anyone riding a bike is also a psychic.

Sidewalk cycling is a bad idea. It makes bad drivers feel that they are even more entitled to the road if they feel that we should be on the sidewalks. Not to mention, some sidewalks and sidepaths are not maintained very well.